I've been burning for a month. This morning it was -15C or pretty close to 0 F. Hard to start diesels this morning.
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Finished the pile of rounds we had and after stacking it's just over 2.5 cords.
All hand split.
Thankfully I could call on the stacking crew to help queue up the rounds on the block, fill the wheelbarrow and stack in the woodshed.
I've got another pile of logs I'll buck up into another pile of rounds so I can get the wood cribs full to bring it up to 3 cords. That will get us set for the winter.
It's been 20F at night here, 40+ during the day but the wood fire is essential in keeping the house @ 70F.
I started burning wood the day after Thanksgiving. I've got 4.5 pick up loads split and stacked so I should be pretty good for this winter.
has this been posted? not gonna read 19 pages of chopping wood but this looks smart:
^ everybody looks like a genius splitting straight knotless wood.
i have some dry ponderosa pine rounds that split like those in the video (i split in an old tire). if feels good, especially after the time spent hand-splitting knotty, stringy oak. i would argue that dry manzanita is even more satisfying; the btu/burn quality to ease of splitting ratio is really good.
I've had some dry knotless ash that I could almost split be giving it a hard stare ;).
Huh.? I'm too low for lodgepole. I'm gonna double check with the friend that gave me the rounds.... could be sugar pine....
When I lived in Alaska, I liked to wait to split until the temp was -25 or below. Stuff just flew apart. Mostly spruce and birch.
Some of the easiest wood for me to split is dry ash trees. When red and burr oak and red and sugar maple are dry they are fairly easy to split. The worst wood to split for me is elm, which is stringy and often twisted or wet cottonwood, which sucks in the splitting maul and still refuses to crack. Dry birch can be a pain as well because it likes to break apart too much rather than split cleanly.
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A member once said they wouldn't burn with my stove due to it not being healthy. Well I agree, it's messing with my breathing. However I'm a renter and my landlords are cheap hippies that don't like forking over for the costly problems of maintaining an old log cabin. We get by but I'm concerned about the long term effects of breathing smoke particulates. I looked around trying to figure out the legality and if there was some sort of oversight organization but couldn't find anything for Oregon? And if it's unhealthy does anybody happen to know what my rights are as a renter?
Now that ain't workin' that's the way you do it
Lemme tell ya them guys ain't dumb
get an electric wood splitter
push the button/pull the lever
Maybe get a blister on your little finger
Maybe get a blister on your thumb
Money for nothing and your chicks for free
Here's what i found. I'll bet you'll find more of you spend more than the two minutes that i looked
https://www.osbar.org/public/legalin...bitability.htm
https://www.osbar.org/public/legalin...epairsMade.htm
Moar info needed to render a verdict:
Is the wood stove the "only" source of heat?
Are you operating the stove in a manner that is within acceptable standards (seasoned wood etc)
Is there some actual evidence that the stove is malfunctioning? I mean other than someone's opinion from looking at photos on the Internet.
It it's the only source of heat for the cabin. I enjoy they place but am learning old stoves are unhealthy. Wood is definitely seasoned properly. We had it inspected prior to the winter and the cleaner said he could tell we burned properly and hot as the pipe was relatively clean. As an asthmatic my lungs are super sensitive to smoke and it gets to me occasionally. Landlords are nice don't get me wrong but I can't afford my own house and want to be safe in my rental.
Sorry to hear about the asthma, sounds like you'd be a good candidate for breaking the lease due to health reasons.
assuming that you know how to correctly operate your wood stove, i see this as a habitability (or lack of habitability) issue because your home's heating system is not installed properly, safe, and/or in good working order, and thus your landlord has not met the state-required habitability standards of a rental unit. if you want to keep your place, i'd suggest speaking to the landlord and having a written agreement about making the "repairs" yourself and deducting all expenses from your rent, meaning buying a new stove and having it properly installed, inspected, etc. The fallback is to break your lease and take your landlord to small claims court for additional expenses (rent/deposit/etc) that you made while unknowingly occupying and renting a unit that did not meet the habitability standard. Often, county or city governments have services (or can direct you to services) that help renters through some of this process.
^^^ That.
you're welcome. look at the link I posted a few posts higher.
I used to take the kids up the hill to cut Personal Use white spruce and birch in the cold. We'd camp. The kids loved it, even my daughter.
Now I just wear shirtsleeves and go to the riverbed and collect mostly white, Lutz, Sitka, and the occasional birch log off the gravel with the trailer winch, or a saw winch and peavys.
Clear Sitka splits real nice no matter what temp:
That's a great video. I really enjoyed it, thanks for posting it.
I live in the southern Rockies now, and we have Englemann and Co. Blue spruce. When I'm splitting and tossing, it often makes such a pretty sound that it reminds me of why spruce is used to make musical instruments.
But we never get trees as big as those beautiful Sitkas.
I like Martins and Goodalls, but Bob Taylor and company definitely has their shit together, and they make some really cool vids about the processes of luthiery.
Clear Englemann white and Adirondack red spruces are prized more as tonewoods than even Sitka. This has a lot to do with their exceptional tonal qualities, but it also may be due to the fact that trees big enough and clear enough are really hard to find anymore, and most are rightly protected one way or another.
On another note...
The 2015 Capitol Christmas tree came from just a few miles up the road from my home. Stokeworthy!
http://sewardcitynews.com/wp-content...stmas-Tree.jpg http://www.aoc.gov/sites/default/fil...?itok=h8ZbTC6u
http://www.ktuu.com/news/news/journe...laska/36074832
http://www.reuters.com/video/2015/12...RuWQMsvdHRy.97
Griswold. lol.
http://jesusinraybans.prod.wordpress...k-Griswold.jpg
"Griswold" means something like greywood in Germanic Old English, so it's probably fitting she did the writeup. The National Xmas tree is kind of a big deal here still...
Carol is pretty cool. Big Kafka fan. She wrote a hilarious account of the nutbag who spent 45 minutes addressing our city council about her Biblical tribulations fleeing a ungeheures Ungeziefer (bedbug) infestation at her indigent housing unit in Anchorage a couple years ago. I still laugh just thinking about it. :biggrin:
So PG&E contractors were here falling hazard trees last week. This is the first time I've seen my house in the daylight since Dec 22. Notice how everything is "neatly stacked". Got a few years worth of pine and fir on deck. No driving. Might buy a splitter.
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They chipped all slash when they came through my hood in the summer and left the trunks as large logs. Hopefully they will come again as the number of hazard trees (especially pond pine) has drastically increased as a result of the drought.
They dropped 23 trees in and around my acre.
Were they dead/dying trees that threatened the lines if they fell over or trees that were too close to the lines?
We had two sets of assessors and crews, one tagging trees and limbs that were too close to the lines and one assessing hazard trees. I never got a good explanation from the assessors about the differences and overlap between their assessments. They did the assessment in the spring in my hood and took out 9 trees and half an oak on my property, including one large dead pine that was about 50 feet from the lines. It appears that i now have several other similar sized pine in bad shape after this summer that are all close to the lines. Pg&e took down 20 trees on my adjacent neighbor's property the summer.
Yes
I am loving this. No more noise no, more exhaust and now more running out of fuel!
http://i619.photobucket.com/albums/t...psdyx7taby.png
Engrish motherfucker! Dew ewe speek it?
Only people I've seen running electric saws in Montana are timber framers
I was considering one because a 100' extension cord will get most places on my property, I am murder on gasoline engines and my Stihl .017 was having issues. I only need it for small jobs. The Stihl is fixed and I have mostly moved on.